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Martin
Luther King, Jr. - Apostle of Love
By Naidhruva Rush
After
more than 30 years, its a bit hard to appreciate the extent
of the changes brought about by the civil rights revolution of the
sixties. Public services and accommodations were desegregated, employment
and housing discrimination were outlawed, and blacks gained equal
voting rights and protection at polling places.
Martin Luther King, Jrs role in these gains was pivotal. His
movement took the civil rights protest out of the courts, up until
then its main venue, into the arena of direct action: boycotts,
marches, sit-ins. After decades of snail-like gains, the barriers
came tumbling down.
After more than 30 years, it is even harder, perhaps, to appreciate
the impact of Kings vision and its importance to the success
of his efforts. It was Kings philosophy of love and nonviolence
that gave power and credibility to his movement. Today, when images
of violence are everywhere -- media, movies-- Kings vision
may seem quaint to some. But his message was universal,
and no less relevant today than 30 years ago.
Love as Power
Drawing from the teachings of Jesus, Thoreau, and Gandhi, King preached
non-violent rebellion against unjust laws and love for ones
enemies. For King, non-violence was an expression of love. And love
-- far from being a tepid sentimentwas as an expression of
the superior power of the soul.
Power at its best is love implementing the demands of justice.
Justice at its best is love correcting everything that stands against
love
Central to Kings vision was the importance of consciousness
or attitude--the spirit of an undertaking. King taught that nonviolence
must be grounded in the desire for harmony and cooperation with
the oppressor, and justice for all, not just blacks.
He cautioned against the use of non-violence without the spirit
of nonviolence and spoke repeatedly against meeting anger with anger,
hate with hate. King was as much concerned with the effect of the
battle on the hearts and minds of the protesters and their white
opponents as with the outcome. His was a vision of unity, one that
saw people of different races, religions and social backgrounds
working and living together in a spirit of harmony and cooperation.
Without love and compassion, unity was impossible.
Courage and Commitment
A visions capacity to inspire is only so great as a leaders
commitment to it and Kings commitment never wavered. His response
to the bombing of his home during the Montgomery bus boycott is
merely one case in point. After the bombing, an angry black crowd,
armed with guns, sticks, and other weapons, gathered outside his
damaged home, threatening the boycotts commitment to non-violence.
King urged his followers to put down their weapons and to love their
white brothers, no matter what they did. Confronted
with such clear proof of the depth of Kings belief in love
and nonviolence, the angry crowd settled down, grew peaceful and
went home.
Those who initially saw nonviolence as cowardice soon learned otherwise.
King underwent public humiliation, beatings, death threats and imprisonment
because of the ideals and principles he believed in. Those who followed
King knew that he asked nothing of them that he would not first
do himself.
Kings message and mission did more than change a society
it changed the individuals who practiced it. King made people conscious
not only of love but of other untapped potentialities, and gave
them a way to express them. In Montgomery, for example, protesters
organized a car pool system that worked with military precision.
For months, the black community covered all the expenses of the
car pool, including $5000 a month for gas. Like King, protesters
were targeted for harassment and personal threats, and for over
a year lived under the ever-present specter of violent resistance
to their efforts. Whether a boycott, freedom march, or sit-in, participation
in Kings moral and spiritual army for change
required not only love and personal dignity, but also courage, self-restraint,
and self-discipline.
We did not hesitate to call our movement an army. But it was
a special army, with no supplies but its sincerity, no uniform but
its determination, no arsenal but its faith, no currency but its
conscience.
A Common Destiny
At the 1963 March on Washington, King reiterated a major theme
that the freedom and destiny of white Americans was inextricably
linked to that of their black brothers and sisters. We are not strangers
to one another, King taught, but members of the same human family,
fellow travelers on a common journey.
According to King, personal fulfillment came from expressing love
and compassion, while negative attitudes hatred, anger, fear
in time, made one hateful, fearful, and angry. Segregation
and the attitudes it instilled was thus as harmful to whites as
to blacks. Throughout his life, King emphasized that his aim was
never to humiliate or even to defeat whites but to win their friendship
and understanding.
King was a moral and spiritual leader who had a major impact on
the history of his times. Yet despite the fame and recognition he
attracted, his quiet humility remained unchanged. Kings focus
was on the job to be done, not on his own role. Had King gloried
in the importance of his position, he would never have been able
to inspire people with the dedication needed to bring the protest
movement to success.
In accepting the Nobel Peace prize in 1964, King highlighted the
contribution of the nameless thousands whose commitment to the ideals
he preached had made the civil rights victories possible. Without
such followers, no civil rights revolution could have occurred,
however grand Kings vision might have been.
Ultimately King was sustained by deep faith in God, and a belief
in the potential for goodness in all people. In his own words:
I am convinced that the universe is under the control of a
loving purpose, and that in the struggle for righteousness man has
cosmic companionship. Behind the harsh appearance of the world there
is a benign power.
By Naidhruva Rush, copyright 2000.
For a discussion of the principles exemplified by King and other
successful leaders see the handbook, The
Art of Supportive Leadership by J. Donald Walters, (Crystal
Clarity, Publishers)
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